Answers below...
> From: monnier@IRO.UMontreal.CA
> To: vincent.b.1@hotmail.fr
> Date: Thu, 7 May 2009 13:22:19 -0400
> CC: karl@freefriends.org; emacs-devel@gnu.org
> Subject: Re: Initialisation of dired-x for install-info guessing
>
> > "for %i in ( * ) do install-info \"%i\" dir")
> [...]
> > "for i in * ; do p=`dirname \"$i\"`;install-info $i $p/dir\"; done"
>
> Regarding these rules, I have a different question: how likely/common is
> it for people to find *.info file and to use install-info on them?
Well just to give some examples, I have downloaded the info file of Bash and that of Texinfo on my machine and I have installed them with install-info by hand. I also installed all the manuals that were coming with the MinGW tool-chain with install-info. I am also writing myself 3 manuals for emacs extension packages (one is for emacs-template which is still under discussion with Christoph Wedler, and the two other are for extension packages I am developping myself), and I had also to install them with install-info.
I recognize that it is not that often, but it happens...
> Then the next question is: what is the shape of the most common way to
> use install-info on such files?
>
>
There are a number of options to call install-info, like for any other commands. But this is also true for any of the commands that are invoked by means of the dired-x default shell guess. I think that the shape
install-info file.info dir
is the most common... but you should cross check this with Karl Berry...
Vincent.
> Stefan
>
>
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